Sunday, December 23, 2007

Chinese language - Rural labor shortage beginning to be felt

BIZCHINA / Top Biz News

Rural labor shortage beginning to be felt
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-05-29 09:12

Despite government figures to indicate China still has a contingent of
150 million migrant workers awaiting to  transfer from rural to urban
areas, signs have emerged to show that the country's labor resources is
on a trend of shrinkage.

Although southern booming Guangdong Province has sucked up more than 19
million migrant workers, its annual labor shortfall remained at two
million. Factories found it hard for them to employ migrant workers with
low income any more.

Shortfall of labor power has cropped up not only in coastal booming
towns, but in inland cities. Central China's Henan Province, the
country's most populous province, for instance, has gone all out to
expand textile and clothing industries but the workforce in local textile
and clothing mills was only 70 percent of what they had expected.

A latest survey from the Ministry of Labor and Social Security showed
that in 2006, construction engineering and machine building enterprises
in prosperous coastal areas are willing to pay workers at least 1,000
yuan (about 125 US dollars) per month, almost equal to the local monthly
salary of college graduates. But these enterprises paid 600 yuan to
workers every month three years ago.

Han Jun, director of the Research Center of Rural Economy under the
Development Research Center of the State Council, said that 20 percent of
the rural areas in China no longer have surplus labors at present.

Xinyang City of Henan Province had 3.5 million rural laborers, and 1.86
million of them, mostly young or middle-aged, had gone to work in major
cities. And the city hired at least 30,000 workers to pick tea this year
owing to intensive female labor outflow.

Cai Fang, a noted expert in the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences,
acknowledged that although there will not be a shortfall of laborers in
the absolute number of trades and industries in the years ahead, the
scarcity of laborers will be felt in some areas and in some particular
industries.

Since China initiated reform and opening-up policies in late 1970's,
noted Prof. Wen Tiejun with elite Remin University in Beijing, factories
and enterprises, obtaining cheap land thanks for governmental
preferential policies and mainly engaging in processing materials
supplied by overseas clients, have mushroomed in southern and eastern
China cities.

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